Eugène Schaus

Eugène Schaus (12 May 1901 – 29 March 1978) was a Luxembourgian politician and jurist. Schaus was a leading light in the early days of the Democratic Party, of which he would be President from 1952 until 1959.

Eugène Schaus (1960)

Schaus held office in a number of governments, under Pierre Dupong and Pierre Werner, over a period of thirty years. He served as the Deputy Prime Minister, a position created especially for Schaus, in Werner's first government. He would serve in this capacity again (1969–1974), as well as holding a number of other high offices.

Career

An experienced lawyer, Schaus was elected to the Chamber of Deputies in 1937, in which he served until 1940, when the country was occupied by Nazi Germany and the Chamber was suspended. Having refused to swear allegiance to the occupying forces, Eugene Schaus, his wife and their three children spent most of the war in German deportation camps in Eastern Europe, and returned only at the end of the war. He was the Group for Patriotism and Democracy member of the National Union Government, as Minister for the Interior, and was elected at the next election, in 1945. He would remain in the Chamber of Deputies, as either a sitting deputy or a government minister, until 1974.

Schaus was recognised as the foremost liberal politician in 1947 by his inclusion in the Christian Social People's Party-Democratic Group coalition under Pierre Dupong, adding the position of Minister for Justice to that for the Interior. Due to his leadership of the GD into this government, it is known as the 'Dupong-Schaus Ministry'. In 1951, the CSV formed a coalition with the Luxembourg Socialist Workers' Party, ejecting Schaus from government. The following year, Schaus was elected Democratic Party, succeeding Lucien Dury.

In 1958, a scandal over government corruption allowed Schaus, as opposition leader, to lever himself, and the party (by now renamed the 'Democratic Party') back into government. Schaus alleged that the government had been offered a bribe by a contractor; whilst refusing it and eliminating the company from the list of bidders, the attempted bribe was not reported within the required window, and the government collapsed.[1] The general election held the following year, the Democratic Party almost doubled its share of seats, and replaced the LSAP in the governing coalition that was formed after the election and the death of Prime Minister Pierre Frieden.

Footnotes

  1. "By Accident". Time. 16 March 1959. Retrieved 2007-09-01.
Political offices
Preceded by
Victor Bodson
Minister for Justice
1st time

1947 – 1951
Succeeded by
Victor Bodson
New title Deputy Prime Minister
1st time

1959 – 1964
Succeeded by
Henry Cravatte
Preceded by
Joseph Bech
Minister for Foreign Affairs
1959 – 1964
Succeeded by
Pierre Werner
Preceded by
Pierre Werner
Minister for Defence
1st time

1959 – 1964
Succeeded by
Marcel Fischbach
Preceded by
Giuseppe Pella
President of the Council of the EU
1st time

First half 1960
Succeeded by
Joseph Luns
Preceded by
Emilio Colombo
President of the Council of the EU
2nd time

First half 1963
Succeeded by
Joseph Luns
Preceded by
Henry Cravatte
Deputy Prime Minister
2nd time

1969 – 1974
Succeeded by
Raymond Vouel
Preceded by
Jean Dupong
Minister for Justice
2nd time

1969 – 1974
Succeeded by
Robert Krieps
New title
Ministry created
Minister for the Police Force
1969 – 1974
Succeeded by
Émile Krieps
Preceded by
Pierre Grégoire
Minister for Defence
2nd time

1969 – 1974
Party political offices
Preceded by
Lucien Dury
President of the DP
1952 – 1959
Succeeded by
Lucien Dury
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gollark: > 10 percent of BLM protests are violent. that means if you have 12 protests in your area you are guaranteed to be hurt, or have property damageRandom nitpicking, but that is *not* how probabilities work.
gollark: Although, I'm not sure how a "no capital system" is meant to work, given that you need capital to produce basically anything.
gollark: Lots of the things fitting into each category are completely different from each other in other ways.
gollark: But that's not necessarily a *good* dichotomy.
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